The last couple days climbing were interesting and yesterday was phenomenal.
Thursday we went to do a couple of Brad's new routes. The Missing Link was particularly interesting.
The first pitch is "only" class four but really cool. It leads to a short, steep streak that is likely one of the best protected 5.9's at Pinnacles. The clips are right where you want them and the main crux is quite tricky. The sub crux (past bolt 3) is a little easier but no picnic either - you can high clip both cruxes.
Here's a shot of me getting through the main crux past bolt 2
Yesterday I finally got on Long's Folly Regular Route. I have looked at this thing more times than I can remember. I told myself when I was psyching up to get on lead that it was easier than what I did the day before (little did I know). After you clip bolt 3 and move around the arete to clip bolt 4 and get in the water chute it is game on and the clock is ticking. The feet are good but the bulge pushes you out just enough that it is hard to hang on to a limited selection of not-so-good hand holds. The result - forearms flaming as you lean slightly back, trying to figure out the hands. I stepped down several times and was able to shake out one arm at a time but I knew I was in trouble. The good looking knobs are all polished and have no positive edges so they were worthless for me. I settled on a 5.9+/5.10 crimper for the left hand (fading fast) and a push down for the right hand (classic Pinns maneuver). I barely pulled it off before my grip was going to fail.
Ratings are so difficult to define. The 5.9 I had done the day before had good feet and wasn't pushing me out much, so I had time to stand there and really suss the moves out before committing. Now compare the 5.8 on Long's Folly to the 5.8 on Sombrero. Sombrero has you throwing sequential moves in a continuous fashion and if you don't hit everything just right or don't know how to hit the holds, you won't pull it off. The beauty of that one is you can easily start over from the ground (it took me three tries to unlock it and get it clean). Long's Folly makes you feel like you are dangling out in space and feels really exposed (thank goodness for the high clip) while you are trying to keep your balance and find the right holds. Maybe knowing what I know now would make it easier - maybe not. Either way it has a high thrill factor. The 5th bolt protects moves up into the the chimney nicely and you can get a good #3 camalot in not long after you get in. If I climbed it again, I would take a #5 and #6 camalot too. The chimney climbing is cool, with several good rests, decent rock with some features and the flare isn't too awkward.
High in the chimney on Long's Folly (I have always called it the Butt Crack)
The rest of the day was unusually good. The weather, the people we ran into and the 10 or 12 condors circling (plus the two mating) all combined to make a superbly memorable outing.